Category Livio Di Matteo

The Real Minimum Wage

I was a bit surprised that the recent upsurge in unemployment in Ontario in June, which was especially concentrated amongst youth (individuals aged 15 to 24 years), did not generate much discussion about the impact of the minimum wage.  Ontario’s adult minimum wage rose 75 cents on June 1st to hit 11 dollars per hour.  […]

Ontario Employment: Yours to Discover

Well, the latest Statistics Canada Labour Force Survey numbers paint a rather bleak picture for Ontario with employment dropping by 34,000 jobs and the unemployment rate rising from 7.3 to 7.5 percent. However, Ontario’s employment picture is much more complicated than that and regional numbers suggest that some parts of Ontario – well the GTA […]

Visualizing the Economy

I will be teaching first year economics this fall for the first time in quite a number of years and I want to provide a more gripping visual presentation of what an economy is.  I have the standard set of graphs illustrating the circular flow and the production possibilities frontier in order to provide the […]

Canada: One Hundred and Forty-Seven Years of Economic Growth

Well Canada Day is once again upon us – we now have 147 years of Confederation to celebrate– and what better way to celebrate than with a brief retrospective of economic performance as measured by per capita GDP.  For your viewing pleasure, I present real per capita GDP in $2002 for each of the main […]

What’s in a Name?

We all know that the word “economics” comes from the Greek “oikonomia” which refers to the thrifty management of household affairs. By extension, the origin of the term “economy” is closely related to the same term as it is from the Latin “oeconomia”, which is again from the same Greek “oikonomia”.  From all this, it […]

Ontario’s Economic Future?

Well, the election is over and I must admit I was not that surprised the Liberals formed the government but I am surprised at the fact it is a majority government.  There are now numerous economic challenges facing the province and suspect after the fun of campaigning from the left, the Liberals may eventually be […]

Fiscal Policy Shocks

Well, here is a new contribution to the debate over the effect of fiscal policy shocks from the journal of the Institute for Fiscal Studies.  The authors Paweł Borys, Piotr Ciżkowicz and Andrzej Rzońca are from the Warsaw School of Economics and look at the impact of fiscal policy shocks on EU new member states.  […]

The Economic Role of Monarchy

In the wake of the abdication of King Juan Carlos of Spain, the New York Times ran a short piece on monarchies noting that 12 monarchies still survive in Europe with eight of them being liberal democracies – Belgium, Britain, Denmark, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain and Sweden.  Incidentally, these Scandinavian monarchies in particular are […]

Pre Debate Warmup: Ranking Employment Across Ontario Political Regimes

Well, tonight is the Ontario election debate and inevitably job creation will come up as a topic.  On the one hand, Tim Hudak will have to deal with the fallout over his Million Jobs Plan.  On the other hand, Kathleen Wynne and Andrea Horwath will need to demonstrate what their plans for employment growth in […]

One Million Jobs One More Time

The debate over the Ontario PC “Million Jobs” platform has certainly gone ballistic over the last few days and having posted on the subject in January when the plan was first announced I certainly think its worth another post.  When the “Million Jobs” plan was first mentioned in January, my response was to look at […]